『Does Poetry Matter Anymore? Finding Meaning in a Fast-Paced World | BTL』のカバーアート

Does Poetry Matter Anymore? Finding Meaning in a Fast-Paced World | BTL

Does Poetry Matter Anymore? Finding Meaning in a Fast-Paced World | BTL

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る
Let’s imagine for a moment, together, you and I, something that may happen to you every single day, way too many times, actually. You’re scrolling through your phone, probably waiting for your coffee to brew or sitting in traffic (as a passenger, I hope), and you swipe past a quote. It’s something like, "The sun will rise, and you will try again." The background is a minimalist sketch of a sunrise. It has three million likes.You pause. You double-tap. You might even share it to your stories. It feels profound in that specific, fleeting three-second window.But is it poetry? And more importantly, if that is what’s moving millions of people today, does actual poetry—the kind that takes a little chewing, a little mulling over—even matter anymore?This isn’t the tired, old "Is Poetry Dead?" debate. We’ve been having that argument since someone first decided a limerick wasn't serious enough for the royal court. No, we know poetry isn't dead. It’s alive and well, living in protests, song lyrics, and, yes, Instagram feeds. But the deeper question, the one that keeps me up at night is whether the depth of poetry matters to us anymore.Have we lost our appetite for words that demand something from us?I ask this not from some lofty academic perch, but from the trenches of my own life. Writing poetry has always been my anchor. It has brought me the greatest joy, the most profound clarity, and honestly, a cheap form of therapy. When the world is screaming, poetry is the quiet room where I can hear myself think. It’s a space where language isn't just a tool for selling something or winning an argument; it’s the destination itself.But this isn't about me. It’s about us. It’s about the fact that words still possess an undeniable, world-shaping power. Yet, it often feels like we are increasingly moved by the simplest, most frivolous arrangements of those words. We react to platitudes as if they were revelations. We encounter a cliché wrapped in an aesthetic font, and we call it genius.And look, I get it. The world is heavy. It’s exhausting. We are bombarded with information, crises, and noise from the moment we wake up to the moment we pass out with our phones on our chests. In that environment, a simple, easily digestible "you are enough" feels like a lifeline. I am not here to judge anyone for finding comfort in simplicity. We all need a quick fix sometimes.But we should perhaps worry just a little bit. We should worry if we are consistently running away from the deeper, richer, more complex meanings found in true poetry. Because when we only consume the literary equivalent of fast food, our intellectual and emotional palates change. We lose the patience required to sit with a difficult emotion. We lose the vocabulary needed to articulate the messy, contradictory, beautifully complicated human experience. We settle for "sad" when we could be exploring "melancholy," "despair," or "the quiet ache of a Sunday afternoon."When we run from complex language, we are running from complex thought.Now, before we sound the alarm and blame the modern attention span for all of society's ills, we need to have a very honest conversation about who is actually to blame for this disconnect. We can't talk about whether poetry matters without talking about the people who, for a very long time, acted like they owned it.Yes, I’m talking about the gatekeepers. The self-appointed guardians of the literary realm who lived in their ivory towers, peering down at the masses through spectacles frosted with disdain. For decades—centuries, really—poetry was often taught and presented as a secret club. You had to know the password, which usually involved understanding obscure Greek mythology and recognizing iambic pentameter on sight.If you didn’t “get” a poem immediately, the implication wasn’t that the poem was dense; the implication was that you were stupid.This elitist ostracization did incredible damage. It took an art form that began as an oral tradition—stories told around fires, songs sung in pubs, rhythms used to remember history—and locked it in a dusty classroom. It became ostentatious. It became, in many ways, empty. A performance of intellect rather than a communication of the soul.Think about how poetry was often introduced to us in school. It was presented as a puzzle to be solved, a code to be cracked. What does the blue curtain symbolize? (Plot twist: Sometimes, the author just liked blue). We were taught to dissect poetry, not to feel it. We were taught to analyze the meter, not to let the rhythm move our own heartbeat.Is it any wonder, then, that so many people ran screaming from the poetry section of the bookstore the moment they graduated? If you are constantly told that you aren't smart enough to understand an art form, you will eventually decide that the art form isn't for you.So, when Instagram poetry exploded onto the scene, offering short, immediate, highly accessible feelings, ...
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません